UGC 6614 This galaxy is a member
of the large disk class of LSB galaxies. It has an obvious
bulge and an inner ring; the outer diffuse spiral structure
defines a disk of approximate diameter 150 kpc. The central surface brightness of this galaxy is 24.28

Malin 2 This galaxy is another
huge disk galaxy with a scale length of 15 kpc and a redshift of
15000 km/a. The high surface brightness knot in one of its spiral
arms actually has the same color, luminosity and H-alpha equivalent
width as the entire Large Magellanic
Cloud . B(0) for Malin 2 is 23.4

UGC 1230 This galaxy has a scale length
of 3 kpc and an overall mass like the Milky Way. It has B(0) =
22.9 which is at the brighter end of what should be considered
as an LSB galaxy. What is remarkable about this galaxy are its
very blue colors, despite a low star formation rate. The B-V
and U-B colors of these galaxy are 0.42 and -0.19; typical for
high surface brightness Sc galaxies
which have well defined spiral structure.

UGC 9024 This is another large disk
with a scale length of 5.6 kpc and B(0) = 24.5. Like most of
the LSB galaxies which have large scalelengths, some fragmentary
spiral structure is visible and a central bulge is prominent.

F561-1 This object was discovered
from visual inspections of the New
Palomar Sky Survey It has B(0) = 23.0 and a scale length of
2.5 kpc and is very representative of the kind of galaxy which
has not been detected in previous surveys.

F469-2 This galaxy has B(0) =
23.7 and scale length = 2.9 kpc. With a U-B color of -0.44, it
is the bluest galaxy in the sample. There is no sign of spiral
structure here and the galaxy is just an irregular collection
of blobs.

F611-1 This galaxy is near the
limit of what can be discovered photgraphically (note the level
of the sky noise in this contrast setting). It has B(0) =
24.3 and a scale length of 1.5 kpc. Its overall mass is like that
of the LMC and its integrated colors are significantly bluer.
Again, there is no sign of spiral structure in this rather blue
galaxy.

This image is taken with the Parking Lot Camera system. This
galaxy is normally well resolved into stars and lies at a distance
of about 800 kpc from us. This image in essence shows what this
galaxy would look like at a distance of 10 Mpc from us. Truly
it is a Low Surface Brightness Galaxy. So, which galaxy is
it ?